The Devonshire Manuscript/Who hath more cawse for to complayne
Introduction | Contributors | Textual Introduction |
←Alas that men be so vngent | I may well say with Ioyfull harte→ |
f. [28r]
1 Who hath more cawse for to complayne
2 or to lament hys sorow and payne
3 Then I wych louys and louyd agayne
4 yet can not optayne
5 I can not optayne that{{th}+t+} ys my none
6 Wych cawsyth me styll to make great mone
7 To se thus ryght with{w+t+} wronge ouerthrowne
8 as not vnknowne
9 It ys not vnknowen how wrongfully
10 The wyll me hyr for to deny
11 whom I wyll loue moste hartely
12 vntyll I dye
13 vntyll I dye I wyll not lett
14 To ss1 seke her owt in cold and het
15 wych hath my hart as fermly set
16 as tonge or pen{_e}ne can yt repet
finis
Notes & Glosses
[edit | edit source] 1. The crossout is indistinct.
Commentary
[edit | edit source]Attributed to Lord Thomas Howard,[1] this poem was entered into the Devonshire Manuscript by TH2. Lines 8-9 allude to the injustice of the speaker’s situation and his entourage's knowledge of his plight. The phrase “my none” resonates with “my none swete wyfe” in the preceding poem, “Alas that men be so vngent” (27v).